| Athura 𐎠𐎰𐎢𐎼𐎠Aθurā | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Province ofAchaemenid Empire | |||||||||
| 539 BC–330 BC | |||||||||
Satrapies of the Achaemenid Empire | |||||||||
| History | |||||||||
• Established | 539 BC | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 330 BC | ||||||||
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| History ofIraq |
Athura[1] (Old Persian:𐎠𐎰𐎢𐎼𐎠AθurāPersian pronunciation:[aθuɾaː]), also calledAssyria, was a geographical area within theAchaemenid Empire inUpper Mesopotamia from 539 to 330 BC as a military protectorate state. Although sometimes regarded as asatrapy,[2][3]Achaemenid royal inscriptions list it as adahyu (pluraldahyāva), a concept generally interpreted as meaning either a group of people or both a country and its people, without any administrative implication.[4][5][6]
It mostly incorporated the territories ofNeo-Assyrian Empire corresponding to what is now northernIraq in the upperTigris, the middle and upperEuphrates, parts of modern-day northwesternIran, modern-day northeasternSyria (Eber-Nari) and part of southeastAnatolia (nowTurkey). However,Egypt and theSinai Peninsula were separate Achaemenid territories.[7][8] The Neo-Assyrian Empire collapsed after a period of violent civil wars, followed by an invasion by a coalition of some of its former subject peoples, theIranian peoples (Medes,Persians andScythians),Babylonians andCimmerians in the late seventh century BC, culminating in theBattle of Nineveh, and Assyria had fallen completely by 609 BC.
Between 609 and 559 BC, former Assyrian territories were divided between theMedian Empire to the east and theNeo-Babylonian Empire to the west. Both parts were subsumed into the Achaemenid Empire in 539 BC, and it has been argued that they constituted the satrapies ofMedia and Aθurā, respectively.[3] InHerodotus's account, theNinth Tributary District comprised "Babylonia and the rest of Assyria" and excluded Eber-Nari.[9]
Despite a fewrebellions, Aθurā functioned as an important part of the Achaemenid Empire and its inhabitants were given the right to govern themselves throughout Achaemenid rule andOld Aramaic was used diplomatically by the Achaemenids.[10]
Known for their combat skills, Assyrian soldiers (along with theLydians) constituted the main heavy infantry of the Achaemenid military.[11] Due to the major destruction of Assyria during the fall of its empire, some early scholars described the area as an "uninhabited wasteland." OtherAssyriologists, however, such as John Curtis andSimo Parpola, have strongly disputed this claim, citing how Assyria would eventually become one of the wealthiest regions among the Achaemenid Empire.[12] This wealth was due to the land's great prosperity foragriculture that the Achaemenids used effectively for almost 200 years.
In contrast to the policy of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, the Achaemenid Persians did not intervene in the internal affairs of their ruling satrapies as long as they continued the flow of tribute and taxes back to Persia.[13]

Between the mid 14th centuries and late 11th century BC, and again between the late 10th and late seventh centuries BC, the respectiveMiddle Assyrian Empire andNeo-Assyrian Empire dominated the Middle East militarily, culturally, economically and politically,[14] and the Persians and their neighbours the Medes, Parthians,Elamites andMannaeans were vassals of Assyria and paid tribute.[15][16]
However, the Assyrian empire descended into a period of civil war in 626 BC, which drastically weakened it, and eventually led to a number of its former subject peoples, namely the Babylonians, Medes, Persians, Scythians andCimmerians, forming an alliance and attacking the civil war-ridden Assyrians in 616 BC. TheBattle of Nineveh in 612 BC eventually left Assyria destroyed for years to come.[17][15][16]
The Assyrians continued to fight on with the aid of another of their former vassals, theTwenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt, also known as the Saïte dynasty, who feared the rise of these new powers. A costly but victoriousBattle at Megiddo against the forces of theKingdom of Judah in 609 allowed Saïte Egypt to advance to the rescue, only to be defeated by the Babylonian-Median-Scythian alliance.Harran, the new Assyrian capital, was eventually taken the same year, thus ending the empire.[18][16]
Despite this, part of the remnants of the former Assyrian army continued to fight on, along with Egypt, until final defeat atCarchemish in 605 BC.[16]
The Babylonian rule was unpopular but did not last long. In 539,Cyrus the Great defeated the Babylonian kingNabonidus—ironically himself an Assyrian from Harran—took Babylon and made it, along with Assyria, into provinces of the newAchaemenid Empire.[16]
The former major Assyrian capitals ofNineveh,Dur-Sharrukin and Kalhu (nowNimrud) were only sparsely populated during Achaemenid rule. Most Assyrian settlement was in smaller cities, towns and villages at plain level, in the mountains, or on mounds such as Tell ed-Darim. However, according to more recent Assyriologists such asGeorges Roux, cities such asArrapḫa, Guzana (now the ruins ofTell Halaf) and Arbela (nowErbil) remained intact, andAshur was to revive. Despite many of the Assyrian cities being left largely in ruins from the battles that led to the fall of its empire in the seventh century BC, rural Assyria was prosperous according to the Greek scholarXenophon.[19] After passing Kalhu and Nineveh (which he described in ruins with only a handful of Assyrians dwelling amongst them), Xenophon and the Greeks turned north-west, following the east bank of theTigris. He described rural Assyria:
[T]here was an abundance of corn in the villages, and found a palace, with many villages round about it ... In these villages they remained for three days, not only for the sake of the wounded, but likewise because they had provisions in abundance – flour, wine, and great stores of barley that had been collected for horses, all these supplies having been gathered together by the acting satrap of the district.[20]
The testimony is an example of the rich agricultural resources of Assyria's region and the existence of a satrap's palace.It is not known exactly where this palace was located, butAusten Henry Layard suggested it may have been nearZakho.[21]
An inscription found in Egypt, written byArsames, describes Assyrian cities that obtained administrative centres under Achaemenid rule:[22]
Prior to the Persian rule of Assyria, the Achaemenids were greatly Assyrianized,[23] and Aramaic continued as thelingua franca of the Empire in the region, with the Imperial Script the everyday writing system. TraditionalMesopotamian religion within the empire was tolerated, and the judicial system,Assyrian calendar and imperial standards imposed by the Assyrians remained in force everywhere.[24]
The Assyrians, like all other tributary peoples of the Achaemenids, were obliged to pay taxes to the Emperor and, whenever he campaigned, supply troops as well. Reliefs of Assyrian tribute bearers carved on the east and north sides of theApadana, consist of seven bearded men: one carrying animal skins, one carrying a length of cloth, two carrying bowls, and two leadingmouflons.[25]
The Assyrian Empire resorted to a policy of deporting troublesome conquered peoples (predominantlyAramean tribes as well as manyJews,Elamites and others) intoMesopotamia. While this allowed some integration, it may have also led to the various rebellions within the Empire in the seventh century. By the sixth century, the indigenous and originallyAkkadian-speaking peoples of Assyria and Babylonia spoke Akkadian-influenced varieties ofEastern Aramaic that still survive among theAssyrian people to this day. Consequently, during the Persian rule of Assyria, Aramaic gradually became the main language spoken by the Assyrians.[26]
Even before the Empire fell, the Assyrians had made Aramaic language thelingua franca of its empire; many could speak it and the ruling elite of Assyria needed to be bilingual, capable of speaking both Akkadian and Aramaic. The conquest of Assyria and the violent destruction of the cities meant that many of these bilingual skilled individuals died with their language and the Aramaic script was incorporated into the Assyrian culture by around the late 6th century BC.[26]

Following the Achaemenid conquest of Assyria under Darius I,Imperial Aramaic was adopted as the "vehicle for written communication between the different regions of the vast empire with its different peoples and languages." The use of a singleofficial language is thought to have greatly contributed to the success of the Achaemenids in holding their far-flung empire together for as long as they did.[27]
Imperial Aramaic was highly standardized; its orthography was based more on historical roots than any spoken dialect, and the inevitable influence of Persian gave the language a new clarity and robust flexibility. In 1955,Richard N. Frye questioned the classification of Imperial Aramaic as an "official language", noting that no surviving edict expressly and unambiguously accorded that status to any particular language.[28]
Frye reclassifies Imperial Aramaic as thelingua franca of the Achaemenid territories, suggesting then that the Achaemenid-era use of Aramaic was more pervasive than generally thought.
For centuries after the fall of the Achaemenids, Imperial Aramaic–or near enough for it to be recognizable–remained an influence on the various nativeIranian languages. Aramaic script and–as ideograms–Aramaic vocabulary survived as the essential characteristics of thePahlavi scripts.[29]
One of the largest collections of Imperial Aramaic texts is that of thePersepolis fortification tablets, which number about five hundred.[30]
Many of the extant documents witnessing to this form of Aramaic come fromEgypt, and fromElephantine in particular. Of them, the best known is theWisdom of Ahiqar, a book of instructive aphorisms quite similar in style to the biblicalBook of Proverbs. Achaemenid Aramaic is sufficiently uniform that it is often difficult to know where any particular example of the language was written. Only careful examination reveals the occasional loan word from a local language.
A group of thirty Imperial Aramaic documents fromBactria were recently discovered, and an analysis was published in November 2006. The texts, which were rendered on leather, reflect the use of Aramaic in the fourth century BC Achaemenid provinces of Bactria andSogdia.[31]
Aramaic dialects and written script survive to this day among the Christian Assyrians of Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria and northwestern Iran.
In 546 and 520 BC, the two Assyrian provinces of Mada and Athura revolted against the Achaemenids.[32] Though the revolts were suppressed, it illustrated that the two regions acted in unison, suggesting perhaps an ethnic and cultural link. Having said this a rebellion could occur in several different parts of an Empire for geographical reasons and it may have been that the whole of the Mesopotamia region became swept with rebellion.
Although the effectiveness of the once invincible Assyrian army was shown to be greatly depleted by the time of its eventual collapse, the soldiers of Assyria continued to be brave and fierce warriors. Most soldiers at the time would not wear heavy armour, but rather than act asmelee troops, would serve asskirmishers. The Assyrian troops were different, since they fought as archers, cavalry and heavy infantry and were useful as front line troops. The Assyrian infantry was specifically trained to engage in hand-to-hand combat.[33] A massive army was assembled by Xerxes in the early 5th century BC. Contemporary estimates place the numbers between 100,000 and over a million. Whatever the number, it was enormous and the Persians summoned troops from all across their realm. Herodotus remarks thatAssyrian soldiers were employed inXerxes's expedition to Greece.[32]
The Assyrian contingent wore on their heads either bronze helmets or plaited helmets of a peculiarly foreign design which is hard to describe. Their shields, spears, and daggers, resembled Egyptian ones, and they also carried wooden clubs with iron studs, and wore.
— Herodotus[34]

The Assyrians continued to serve the Achaemenids under EmperorDarius the Great, who was at his time considered the greatest ruler, often styling himself as "King of Kings." He ruled as a king over many other powerful subordinates and, as such, it was believed that a great palace should be built atSusa inPars. The Assyrians were employed in the construction of this building, albeit with many other tributary peoples as well as Persians themselves. The western Assyrians of Athura were closer toMount Lebanon, where fine trees could be found and timber processed for Darius's grand Palace. The eastern Assyrians of Mada were charged with excavating gold.[32]
Assyrian influence over Achaemenid art and sculpture can be seen in various areas of the empire. Examples include the doorway relief of the palaces inPasargadae,[35] and in theBukan area (nearUrmia) where various tiles are decorated with human-headed winged figures, lions, andibexes.[36] The symbol of the Assyrian godAššūr was chosen as thefaravahar, the symbol of God inZoroastrianism, during the Achaemenid rule of Assyria.[37]
The best example of Assyrian influence can be observed in theGate of All Nations inPersepolis, with twolamassus (human-headed winged bull) in the entrance.[35] The Assyrianlamassu was used to protect the palace from evil spirits, while those of Persepolis expressed meditative calm and humanity.Iranologists andAssyriologists have tried to answer the question of how was the influence transmitted. Possibilities include contacts between Athura and Persia were frequent and Achaemenid architects visited the Assyrian palaces. Other suggest Assyrian slaves were brought back to Persia to have them work on the new palaces.[38]
As with many other countries, the primary occupation was farming.[39] The large output of Mesopotamian farms resulted in highly populated civilizations.[39] The chief crop that fueled the ever-growing civilizations in the region was the grain barley and enumer wheat though sesame seeds also provided a source of nourishment.[39] Like much of the rest of the world at the time, the economy of Athura relied heavily upon the produce of the farms and the rivers, including fish and what fruit and meat could be raised in the Euphrates' fertile soils. The agricultural year began with sowing after summer. Flooding posed a serious risk to farmers, whilst rodents were supposedly driven off by prayers to the rodent god.[40] To ensure that such prayers were answered, tall silos were built to house the grain and keep out the mice.
Trees were grown for their fruit. To prevent the hot winds of the region from destroying the crops, tall palm trees were planted around the smaller trees, thus breaking the wind and shading the plants from the heat of the sun, the intensity of which provided plenty for the plants, even when shaded.[40] Following the Persian conquest, peaches were added to the original Assyrian mix of apples, cherries, figs, pears, plums andpomegranates.[40] Tree growing was an art mastered with tree-cutting and even "artificial mating" in order to have the Palm trees yield fruit.[40] In the north, rainfall in Athura met the demands of farming but in the more southernly parts (covering Mada)Shadufs were used to assist in irrigation.[41]
Oxen, donkeys, cattle and sheep were raised, the latter for their milk (which could be turned into butter) and the former as draught animals. Pigs, ducks, geese and chickens were all raised for their meat. Hunting supplemented the food supply with birds and fish.[42]
The down-time resulting from farming and the seasons allowed men and women to master other skills in life such as the arts, philosophy and leisure. Without the fertile soils of theEuphrates river valley, civilization would not have come to be.[39]

Kalhu (Nimrud)'s buildings were dramatically destroyed during the sacking of 614–612 BC. However, evidence of reoccupation during the "post-Assyrian period" (612–539 BC) is noted in various areas, including the Palace ofAdad-nirari III, the North-West Palace, the Burnt Palace and Nabu Temple complex, Fort Shalmaneser, and the Town-Wall Houses.[43]
Xenophon passed by Nimrud (which he called Larissa) in 401 BC along with 10,000 Greek soldiers and described the city as
a large deserted city ... Its wall was twenty-five feet in breadth and a hundred in height, and the whole circuit of the wall was two parasangs. It was built of clay bricks, and rested upon a stone foundation twenty feet high ... Near by this city was a pyramid of stone, a plethrum in breadth and two plethra in height; and upon this pyramid were many barbarians (Assyrians) who had fled away from the neighbouring villages.[44]
Despite Xenephon's description of the city as being abandoned, archaeological evidence seems to show that there was some Achaemenid-period occupation. Phase 3 or H in the Nabu Temple complex and Burnt Palace is described as Achaemenid occupation.[45] They include traces of kilns on the south side of Room 47 in the Burnt Palace, together with red glass ingots and slag, which after a radiocarbon analysis yielded a date of 425 +/− 50 BC.[46] In the Nabu Temple, a pipe lamp and a group of seven pottery vessels are considered to be "ascribed to the Achaemenid period."[47] There was also some Achaemenid occupation in the South-East Palace: a deep footed bowl, a hemispherical bowl (which is compared with pottery from the Achaemenid village at Susa),[48] and three pottery vessels.[49] Also in the South-East Palace were two "eye of Horus" amulets, often regarded as hallmarks of Achaemenid period material culture. Another eye of Horus amulet has been found in the Town Hall Houses. In the palace of Adad-nirari III, three bronze kohl sticks with castellated heads having been identified as Achaemenid period.
Like other Assyrian capitals,Assur was greatly destroyed during the battles of the century before. The importance of the city thereafter is not clear, but much evidence indicate it was a flourishing city during the Achaemenid rule. After the Babylonian conquest byCyrus the Great, the "Cyrus Cylinder" mentions Assur as one of the cities of which cult statues were returned.[50]In 401 BC,Xenophon describes the city as
A large and prosperous city named "Caenae" (Assur[51][52]) which was seen on the opposite (west) bank of the Tigris River.[53] From this city, the barbarians (Assyrians) brought over loaves, cheeses and wine, crossing upon rafts made of skins.
At the Assur Temple, two shrines have been identified as being built between the fifth and third centuries BC.[54] A few graves at the site also may have been belonged to the Achaemenid period. From the grave site, a pair of circular earrings with globules has clearly been identified as Achaemenid.[55] These earrings are similar to the silver earring found atDur-Sharrukin nearNineveh. In another grave, Haller dates grave number 811 as Achaemenid period.[56] The grave contained three bodies, a stamp-seal showing the goddessIshtar standing on the back of a lion. This might indicate thatancient Mesopotamian religion was still being practiced within the Assyrian population during the Achaemenid rule. Other objects from the grave 811 include a bronze fibula; another earring, but gold rather than the earlier described silver; different kinds of beads of silver, agate, frit and glass; an alabastron; a bowl made of copper; and two pottery bottles.[56] It is not clear, however, if all the items are Achaemenid in date.
To the northeast ofKirkuk, the site of Tel ed-Daim shows significant evidence of Achaemenid rule.[57] A small fortified palace (most probably for a local governor) includes a bronze wall-plaques, a bronze snaffle-bit of a type well known from Achaemenid contexts at Persepolis, kohl tubes with ribbed decoration tapering, and pottery.[58] The pottery in the palace show similarities with the pottery from Nimrud that has been identified as Achaemenid.[59]
In the Eski Mosul Dam Salvage Project, a few items were identified as dating from the Achaemenid period. The project was located to the northwest ofMosul, in the upper Tigris valley, and within the Assyrian heartland. In the Kharabeh Shattani site, various amounts of pottery have been dated Achaemenid. These include four bowls of which have similarities of Achaemenid bowls in Susa and Pasargadae.[60] Other times include clay spindle whorls, two iron sickle blades, and a bronze plate optimistically identified as a horse's forehead plaque. A bronze finger-ring with a crouching animal engraved on the bezel was also found in the site and is considered to be widespread in the Achaemenid empire.[12] Also in the project, a grave site excavated found bodies that included a conical kohl pot and a bronze pin with a castellated top. These objects are considered to be distinctive Achaemenid type.[61]

In the late fourth century BC,Alexander the Great led his Greco-Macedonian army to conquer the Achaemenid Empire. The empire's vast territory and numerous tributary peoples ensured that rebellion would be a constant problem. This newGreek Empire relied upon the administrative system put in place by the Persians to govern these new lands; consequently, the Assyrian lands of Athura and Mada were administrated as such by their ownsatraps. When Alexander the Great died, the Greek successor state of the Seleucid Empire, created in theBabylonian War, retained control of much of the Persian Empire. TheBabylonian Chronicles now show the vitality of Greek culture in ancient cities like Babylon.
Whilst Greek rule beyond the Euphrates was subject to constant and eventually successful Iranian incursions,Assyria was forced to take the role of a frontier province, first defending the Seleucid Empire against the Parthians and later defending the Parthian Empire against the Romans. Greek rule in the East did not last long, although the cultural impact did - by the mid-third century BC, the satraps began revolting against the Seleucid Empire inIran andBactria, establishing their own domains. A temporary revival of Seleucid power reestablished Imperial authority in these regions in the late 3rd and early 2nd century BC, but afterward the Parthians came to incorporate the lands known as Assyria once again by the mid-second century BC.
Rule by theParthian Empire aimed to emulate that of their Persian predecessors, the Achaemenids, with a similar system of administration involving satraps and smaller provinces. Indeed, the main rebel behind the rise of Parthia from Seleucia was a satrap himself.[62] On top of this, the Parthian Empire was more decentralized and power was shared amongst clan leaders,[62] hinting at the possibility of the retention of the provinces.Mesopotamia became the heartland of theSeleucid Empire with a new capital,Seleucia, founded. As a result, much culture and knowledge was exchanged between the Greeks and the Assyrians. The invasions of Alexander the Great consisted not only of soldiers but scientists and historians.[63]
Beginning in the first century BC, the Romans began expanding their Empire at the cost of the Parthians. Initially, the nomadic military tactic of circling and shooting worked to deadly effect against the slow, heavy-moving infantry of the Romans.[64] In time, however, superior technology and strategy drove the Parthians out of theMediterranean and most ofAnatolia. The Parthians continued to resist Roman rule, invading and in turn being invaded by the Romans many times, with their capitalCtesiphon being sacked three times.[65] The consequence of these bloody and inconclusive wars meant that the Assyrian provinces bore the brunt of the fighting, with Assyrian troops fighting for one side and then, at the change of the governing of the lands of Mada and Athura, fighting for the other side. Naturally such events served to undermine the Assyrians.
Assyrians had begun to adopt Christianity from the first century and Aramaic remained the spoken language of the region.
By the second century AD, the Roman Empire underTrajan began to achieve the upper hand against the Parthians and established the province ofAssyria along the Euphrates and Tigris.
From AD 226, Assyria became a province of theSasanian Empire and was known asAsōristān ("Asōr-land") inMiddle Persian.
In 650, the area fell to theearly Muslim conquests. However, the region remainedAramaic-speaking and largely Christian well into the Middle Ages. Assyrians remain in the area to this day, and there are a number ofAssyrian towns and villages in the region. In addition, cities such asMosul,Dohuk,Erbil andKirkuk have Assyrian populations. Most Assyrians remain Christian and retain the Aramaic language and script.
With the fall of Nineveh, the Empire was split in two, the western half falling in the hands of a Chaldean dynasty, the eastern one in the hands of Median kings. In 539 BC, both became incorporated in the Achaemenid Empire, the western one as the megasatrapy ofAssyria (Aθūra), the eastern one as the satrapy ofMedia (Māda).
Radner provided a typological assessment of revolts throughout the Neo-Assyrian period (ca. 1000-609 BC)
Radner provided a typological assessment of revolts throughout the Neo-Assyrian period (ca. 1000-609 BCE)